All Things Purple (1)

(Part 1. Part II will be about Prince)

I’ve been wondering, the past few days, about how to integrate my love of gardening into this blog. The other day I went to get some cabbage out the fridge to shred for tacos and found this:

I was amazed that it grew in the refrigerator so much and was actually taken aback to the degree that I did no barbering of the plant/vegetable and just popped into the soil nilly-willy, as you can see. The next day, I was calmer and tore off all the old leaves and composted them. This is what it looked like after that:

I am amazed and totally obsessed with this plant: the fact that it grew, unnoticed, in my fridge; it’s full-throttled desire to go to seed, etc. Deep as that aspect of my love of this plant is, there is an even deeper aspect and that is the color purple. Whenever, I say that phrase “the color purple”, my mind immediately goes to Alice Walker’s book, of course. I still remember the first time I laid my eyes on the words that make up that beautiful story. I was sitting at a round table in a high school classroom. One of my tablemates was discussing it and had a copy in her hands. I don’t remember what she said but I remember it was enough for me to ask to see the book and once it was in my hands, I started reading. Celie resonated with me from the start! I wanted to steal the book from my tablemate but instead, I went to a bookstore and acquired it the only way a teenager with no money could in the pre-metal detectors 80s. I read it all the way home. Then I read it again and again and again. That book changed the trajectory of my life. First of all, I had never before read a story written by a black woman centering black women. Never. It wasn’t even a part of my consciousness as a young black teenaged girl. Little Women, yes. Jane Eyre, yes. Toni Cade, no. Toni Morrison, no. The Color Purple changed all of that and I am forever grateful!

Here are a couple of Alice Walker quotes related to purple-related quotes :

“I think it pisses God off if you walk by the color purple in a field somewhere and don’t notice it. People think pleasing God is all God cares about. But any fool living in the world can see it always trying to please us back.”

The Color Purple – Alice Walker

“Womanist is to feminist as purple is to lavender.”

In Search of our Mothers’ Gardens: Womanist Prose (1983)

Alice Walker’s website:

https://alicewalkersgarden.com/

Reading is Evolutionary

Two years ago a blogger for Circle of Seven Productions posted a blog/rant on my space in favor of reading and literacy. As part of it, she issued a challenge: “I challenge anyone reading this blog to write one blog…just one…encouraging people to read. Encourage them to encourage others to read. READ ANYTHING!”

As I find myself getting almost orgasmically excited by my latest read (The Book of Night Women by Marlon James), my mind traveled to my response to the challenge.

 

Reading is Evolutionary

It was the diary of a young girl living in an era I could never go back because time moves forward.

Just like time, my eyes moved forward through each page growing more and more enamored of the first book that touched me in my black girlness. It was beyond affirming.

That book, The Color Purple by Alice Walker set me on the path to being a writer because it enabled me to see how our life stories can contribute to literature.

It also helped me to redefine the definition of fiction. I have heard a lot of people (black men in particular) say that they don’t read fiction because they’re tired of “lies” or some statement to that effect. I believe however that those statements miss the point of black “fiction”.

It is (or should be) indisputable that prior to the mid to late 20th century our voices were censored. What better way for a people to get in where they fit in that to position their works under the banner of fiction. Is Ralph Ellison’s The Invisible Man total fiction? Or does it resonate with the experience of black men, regardless of their generation? Toni Morrison’s Beloved was based on the life of Margaret Garner. Margaret Garner’s story isn’t fiction. Is Sethe’s? My favorite James Baldwin novel is If Beale Street Could Talk. I recognized the main character, Tish, in the faces, lives and pride of my sisters. Black fiction is not automatically fictional.

Read.

Even though I am an advocate and a believer in well-written, reality-based “fiction”, that is not the only thing I read. As someone who intimately understands the saying “those who don’t know history are doomed to repeat it”, I also read history. In high school, a teacher slipped me the Autobiography of Malcolm X on the sly. It was a thick paperback that I had to rubber band together in order not to lose any of the pages. Reading that book led me on the path to researching the Black Revolution of the Sixties. My research deepened my awareness of black resistance. At no point were we passive.

Regardless of the danger, we struggled to learn to read when it was dangerous to the point of death. Frederick Douglass described in his autobiography of the poor white boy who showed him how to read. The Free African School movement is an indication of our desire to reclaim what was stolen from us and learn.

Read.

Reading is Evolutionary.